Reconceptualizing networks and return migration: constructing identities, negotiating the ethnos and mapping diasporas - theoretical challenges regarding empirical contributions (in the Greek-American case)

Christou, Anastasia (2004) Reconceptualizing networks and return migration: constructing identities, negotiating the ethnos and mapping diasporas - theoretical challenges regarding empirical contributions (in the Greek-American case). Spaces of Identity, 4 (3). pp. 53-70. ISSN 1496-6778

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Abstract

The article addresses the theoretical implications of how inclusive and exclusive spaces (belongingness and alienation) emerge when second-generation Greek-American return migrants relocate and settle in their ancestral homeland and draws attention to competing discourses of cultural disruption and ruptures in identification patterns. The ambivalent spaces of ‘home’ and ‘host’ interactions accentuate agency but also pose additional conceptual challenges for the redefinition of notions of self, belonging, and nation.

Item Type: Article
Schools and Departments: School of Global Studies > Geography
Subjects: G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation > G Geography (General) > G0001 Geography (General)
Depositing User: Anastasia Christou
Date Deposited: 06 Feb 2012 15:20
Last Modified: 18 Sep 2012 10:41
URI: http://srodev.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/11806
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